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Imam Khamenei: Ahmadinejad's Landslide Victory is a Real Feast

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  • Imam Khamenei: Ahmadinejad's Landslide Victory is a Real Feast

    Imam Khamenei: Ahmadinejad's Landslide Victory is a Real Feast
    Hanan Awarekeh

    http://www.almanar.com.lb/NewsSite/NewsD etails.aspx?id=89857&language=en
    13/06/2009


    Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has won 62.63 percent of the vote across Iran, the
    Iranian Interior Minister said on Saturday. In second place was
    ex-premier Mir Hossein Mousavi with 33.75 percent vote, minister Sadeq
    Mahsouli said.

    Iran's supreme leader Imam Sayyed Ali Khamenei praised Ahmadinejad's
    re-election, saying his landslide victory was a "real feast.
    "The participation rate of 80 percent and the 24 million votes for the
    president-elect is a real feast which can guarantee the country's
    progress, national security and lasting joy," he said in a statement
    read on state television. "I congratulate... the people on this
    massive success and urge everyone to be grateful for this divine
    blessing," the television quoted him as saying.


    Election chief Kamran Daneshjoo had earlier said on state television
    that Ahmadinejad received almost 21.8 million votes or 63.36 percent
    out of nearly 34.4 million valid votes cast in 346 out of 366
    electoral districts across the country. He said Ahmadinejad's closes
    rival, the more moderate ex-premier Mir Hossein Mousavi, garnered 11.7
    million votes or 34.07 percent.

    In a distant third was the former head of the Revolutionary Guards
    Mohsen Rezai with almost 588,000 votes or 1.7 percent while reformist
    ex-parliament speaker Mehdi Karroubi received almost 290,000 votes or
    0.87 percent.

    Earlier, the Iranian Interior Ministry said that Ahmadinejad was set
    for a landslide victory with nearly 80 percent of votes counted in
    Iran's stormy presidential elections. "Doctor Ahmadinejad, by getting
    a majority of the votes, has become the definite winner of the 10th
    presidential election," state news agency IRNA declared as his
    jubilant supporters took to the streets in celebration.

    The level of the incumbent's support, roughly twice as many votes as
    Mousavi, Ahmadinejad's main challenger, with most ballots counted,
    confound
    ented" voter turnout at the polls Friday was also expected to boost
    Mousavi's chances of winning the presidency.

    Mousavi warned on Saturday he would not bow to the "dangerous
    scenario" created in Iran after results showed he had lost to
    incumbent Ahmadinejad.

    Mousavi said he "protested vigorously against the numerous and blatant
    irregularities" in Friday's vote after officials said Ahmadinajad had
    secured about 63 percent of the vote with counting in most districts
    over. The former premier said on a statement that it was his "national
    and religious duty to reveal the secrets of this dangerous process and
    to explain its destructive consequences for the future of the
    country."

    However, as the official results showed Ahmadinejad would be back for
    a second term, his supporters poured on to the streets of Tehran,
    honking their horns and waving Iranian flags.

    In his first term in office Ahmadinejad became known to the outside
    world for his fierce rhetoric against the United States and
    Israel. But Friday's election was also seen as a referendum on his
    handling of an oil exporting economy which enjoyed a surge in
    petrodollar revenues on his watch - a boom which critics say he
    squandered.

    Ahmadinejad, 53, championed Iran's devout poor, especially those in
    rural areas, who felt neglected by past governments and helped sweep
    him to power in 2005.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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